Steve Lang,
Were you keeping score or just diddling around, experimenting ?
Doug Siebert,
Well, numerically, maybe 1 in 10 does constitute an option, but 1 in 100 sure doesn't. And, if the consequences for failure to execute were dire in the 1 in 10 example, then I'd say that's not a viable option either.
DMoriarty,
I'm not familiar with the hole you cite, but, let's move the discussion to a golf course that I think we're both familiar with, NGLA.
Off the tee, what option does a 30-36 handicapper have on each and every hole ?
I maintain, NONE, that there is but one route of play for them.
What you and others are missing, and in denial about, is that options are limited by one's ability, and increase as a players handicap gets lower.
With respect to a game plan, Mike Tyson said, "everybody has a game plan, until they get hit." It's one thing to stand on a tee, and intend to hit in a specific direction, it's quite another to execute that game plan, and precise execution is strictly the domain of the LOW handicap.
Rich Goodale,
I don't konw that a high handicap, hitting a mid iron to a par three is aiming for a 4 1/4 inch hole, rather then a 4,000 square foot green.
It's sort of like the argument you get from golfers at country clubs who want colored flags or diagrams to show them where the hole location is. These are people approaching the green from 180-220 yards who would get the thrill of their life if they could just hit or come close to the green, but from watching to much TV feel that it's important that they know the precise location of the hole.